D. All the above
National and State Governments in the Federal Goverment
Those powers are reserved by the people
limited governement
The states reserve all powers that are not given to the federal government in the Constitution. Individual states can decide whether or not to levy a state income tax. Many parts of the codes of civil law of the various states are different from state to state. There are other examples.
it wasn't really a government. it was divine right - the thought that your power to rule was given by god. if anything, the government he has was probably a constitutional monarchy
D. All the above
National and State Governments in the Federal Goverment
Separation of Powers
Separation of Powers Separation of Powers
None..state powers have state powers and federal powers have federal powers. The powers not given to the federal government belongs to the state so they each have different powers.
State governments have powers in areas such as education, public health, transportation, and intrastate commerce. They also have the authority to regulate land use, conduct state elections, and establish local governments. These powers are outlined in the Tenth Amendment to the US Constitution, which reserves all powers not specifically granted to the federal government to the states.
The different branches of government are given different powers by the Constitution. Powers to tax, declare war, grant pardons, negotiate treaties, interpret the laws, and raise armies are some of the powers granted by the Constitution.
The difference is that Delegated is when powers are given only to national government by the constitution. Reserved is when powers are given to only the states by the constitution, and Concurrent is when power are shared by states and national government according to the constitution.
They are called reserved powers.
Concurrent
Concurrent
expressed powers